Packing List Generator
Destination plus trip length equals a complete list — quantities scale automatically, ticks save as you pack, and anything missing from your wardrobe is one tap to shop.
Outfits
Swim & sun
Layers
Accessories
Essentials
How to pack smarter
- 1. Pick one palette. When everything shares 2–3 colors, every top works with every bottom — that’s how a small case makes many outfits.
- 2. Count outfits, not items. Three dresses and four tops is a dozen looks; ten single-purpose pieces is ten.
- 3. Roll the soft, fold the structured. Roll tees, knits and swim; fold satin and tailoring on top.
- 4. Wear the bulk. Heaviest shoes and jacket travel on you, not in the case.
- 5. Leave room. A quarter of the case empty on the way out means no airport repack on the way home.
Filling wardrobe gaps before the trip?
The vacation edit pulls sun-ready dresses, swim and cover-ups into one place.
Packing FAQs
How many outfits do I need for a week away?+
Fewer than you think: 3 dresses, 4 tops and 2 bottoms mix into well over a dozen outfits. Pack around one palette so everything pairs, and plan on re-wearing bottoms two to three times.
How do I pack light without sacrificing outfits?+
Choose multi-taskers: a dress that works day and night, a cover-up that passes at the pool bar, a jacket that matches everything. The generator above scales quantities so you carry combinations, not duplicates.
Should I roll or fold clothes?+
Roll soft fabrics (tees, knits, swim) to save space and reduce creases; fold or hang-fold structured pieces (blazers, satin) at the top of the case. Packing cubes keep the two apart.
What always gets forgotten?+
Chargers and adapters, sunscreen, and a layer for cold evenings and flights. They are on the Essentials list for exactly that reason.
How far ahead should I shop for a trip?+
Two to three weeks out — enough time for delivery, a try-on and an exchange if a size needs swapping, without any pre-trip stress.